The reviews are sorted alphabetically by authors' last name -- one or more pages for each letter (plus one for Mc).
All but some recent reviews are listed here. Links to those reviews appear on the
Recent Feature Review Page.

Wizard's Holiday by Diane Duanereviewed by Cindy Lynn Speer
Nita's little sister Dairine has decided that they both need a break from Earth. She signs them up for a student exchange
program without asking anyone for permission. When she's found out, her father grounds her, but after some thought decides
that Nita should still go, with her friend and partner in wizardry, Kit. Dairine can stay home and tend to the students,
fellow wizards from other worlds, while Kit and Nita enjoy a vacation on a planet that seems like paradise. Under the surface
of this paradise, though, Nita can sense something is wrong.

Stealing the Elf-King's Roses by Diane Duanereviewed by Regina Lynn Preciado
This is as much a mystery novel as it is science fiction.
Sure, the story involves alternate universes, takes for granted
technologies we won't see for generations yet, and stars a crime-fighting team composed of a
Sighted woman and a wolfhound-like alien. But it's still a first-rate murder mystery.
It's also the best kind of science fiction.

The Young Wizards Series by Diane Duanereviewed by Georges T. Dodds
The series tells of the adventures of the young teen wizards Nita Callahan
and Kit Rodriguez along with Nita's kid sister Dairine, as they use wizardry to defeat the chaotic plans of
the Lone One, master of entropy. The imaginative and meticulously detailed locations for these battles
include an alternate New York City, deep-sea waters beneath the Atlantic, interstellar space, a
magic-saturated Ireland, and inside a diseased human body. Their descriptions and that of the characters
are such that it is easy to suspend disbelief, enter this world of young wizards and empathize
with them as they face their enemy. The rapid pace, diverse adventures and genuine threat of what they are
up against make the books the exciting page-turners they are.

To Visit the Queen by Diane Duanereviewed by Todd Richmond
The story begins when a college student turns a corner at a London Underground
station and finds himself suddenly 100 years in the past. In his panic, he drops the
book he is carrying -- Van Nostrand's Scientific Encyclopedia. Then, miraculously,
he returns to his own time, sans book. Implications? Our feline wizards are about to find out...

The Book of Night with Moon by Diane Duanereviewed by Todd Richmond
Todd feels the book is an excellant addition
addition to Duane's Wizardry series. The detailed descriptions
of her creation mythology and some of the magical underpinnings
of her series will delight most readers. If you have cats, you
should enjoy Duane's unique vision of what those cats may be doing
when you're not looking.

A Wizard Abroad by Diane Duanereviewed by Todd Richmond
This is Diane Duane's fourth Wizardry
book which began with So You Want to Be a Wizard. It
follows the expoits of young Nita Callahan (along with her partner,
Kit and her younger sister, Dairine), who finds a book
at the library that introduces her to the art of Wizardry.